Wednesday, 8 February 2017

Alpacas with Attitude & Bad Grannies

It's been a very busy
week or two! Having travelled over 1500km, it's been a great
opportunity to get well adjusted to travelling in Ken and so far we
are very happy with how things are working out. As anyone who has
ever lived in a van or similar will know, there is always a certain
amount of chaos, as shuffling stuff around from A to B to get this
out or that out is unavoidable and one still only has SO much space
in which to do it. However we now have a lot more room to move, a
lot less chaos and living in Ken is much easier all round. As I
write this, Gareth is out in the sunshine eating his breakfast and
washing it down with a freshly brewed coffee, having just boiled the
jug and fried himself up a feed of sausages on our nifty fold-out
side table. It's the smallest things like this which make life so
much simpler. Cooking and preparing food is super easy and much less
messy now!

Brekky time for Gareth! Um, he's eaten the rest already...

I'm writing this from a
sunny, spacious and very quiet campsite in Upper Hutt, with a
miniature pony to the left of me, ducks to the right and Minnie at my
feet. For someone who lives such a nomadic lifestyle, I have this
rather inconvenient tendency to get attached to places. When I find
somewhere I like, where I feel comfortable, I just want to stay!
It's been this way all week, I'm surprised Gareth was able to get me
out of our last camp ground at all! I swear to goodness I almost
cried when we left, I loved it there so much. It's called the
Wairakei Thermal Valley Holiday Park and unlike everywhere else in
Taupo it was so quiet you could hear a pin drop. Oh, it was
beautiful! Surrounded by wildlife in park-like grounds, I can't
remember being so relaxed in longer than I can remember and everyone
who either stayed or worked there was so happy! Gareth agreed with
me in that it was a bit of a combination of two of our favourite camp
grounds; having the laid back, friendly atmosphere we enjoyed months
before at Kuaotunu, mixed with some of the adorable quirkiness we
experienced at Warkworth. A real haven in the middle of nowhere.

Wairakei Thermal Valley Holiday Park

The only sounds you did
hear were the sound of peacocks wailing (or whatever it is they do –
you know, that unique sound that only peacocks can make!), guinea
fowl giggling and gaggling and my favourite, the alpacas laughing.
There were three of these, and from the moment we arrived they kept
laughing hysterically and constantly looking our way. I was
convinced it was Gareth they were directing their hilarious outbursts
at but as we discovered the next morning it was actually Minnie they
were obsessed with. From the moment they were let out of their
enclosure and allowed to roam the grounds, they came hurtling down
the hill towards us and barely left our van the entire time,
venturing as close to Minnie as they dared. Minnie, usually
oblivious to such attention was rather more than a tad perturbed at
their blatant displays of curiosity! It soon became that hanging
around next to Ken was the place to be for almost all the animals and
we became joyfully accustomed to sharing our breakfast with peacocks,
peahens and a glorious assortment of other spectacular feathered
friends.

Minnie with her devoted followers

My breakfast buddy

We spent two idyllic
days there and for the first part camped next to a sweet little
pensioner who was living in an authentic Indian teepee. She wore an
Indian headdress along with her rather more conventional floral frock
and sneakers and I was more than a little confused as to how and why
someone who chose to live in such a basic home would also wear Nike's
and drive a Toyota Swift. As it turned out, when she asked Gareth to
take photos of her proudly standing outside her abode, it was
actually available to rent from the camp ground at a nightly rate.
'Now I can tick that off my bucket list!' she grinned. I hope to be
half as groovy as her when I'm that age!

Huka Falls

We did the obligatory
Taupo touristy things – well, the free ones anyway, such as going
for a walk around Lake Taupo and the incredible Huka Falls, which I
never tire of seeing. Such power and the water is so impossibly
blue! Our favourite activity however was the Thermal Walk at our
very own camp ground. Whilst signposted from the main road, most
people don't even realise it's there, out in the middle of nowhere
and opt for the more well known tourist spots. Yet this walk is just
as good, if not better than any of the more commercial spots in Taupo
and we were able to take Minnie with us! The tour was self guided,
so we were able to go at our own leisurely place in the evening when
it was cooler – which was just as well as the ground can get very
hot underfoot!

Thermal Walk, Wairakei Thermal Valley

Steaming hot!

The next day we really
had to move on, which was made all the harder by the fact that the
owners had offered us both jobs helping to run the park and camp
ground. I so desperately wanted to stay! But Gareth was right, we
still had so much more to see. We had to keep moving. Fortunately I
had a big incentive in that my eldest son Liam had moved back to
Wellington just a week or two before and was waiting to give us a
guided tour of both the city and his new flat! We had already stayed
an extra day in Taupo as it was, which meant almost a six hour
journey to Wellington if we were going to stay on schedule. I wasn't
looking forward to driving such a long way but as it turned out, it
was a very enjoyable drive. What with the Desert Road, the Army base
at Waiouru and the beautiful Rangitikei cliffs all to admire, the
time flew by. We even stopped in Taihape for an hour to stretch our
legs and ended up climbing a mountain at the Mount Stewart reserve –
I never even knew there was anything to do in Gumboot City!

View from the top of Mount Stewart, Taihape

Gumboot City!

Whilst we were excited
at finally making it to our nation's capital, Gareth and I were a bit
unsure about staying in the city. As a rule, we don't like cities –
in fact that's a bit of an understatement, we tend to run screaming
from them! Not so with Wellington. Now here is a city we love!
Where do we even start. We love the scenery, the architecture, the
narrow streets, the laid back vibe, the landmarks and monuments, the
houses in the hills, the history, the waterfront, the fact that
despite being a huge city, there's just so much space, unlike
Auckland it's not crowded at all! Despite it being Waitangi weekend,
there was plenty of room for everyone and people simply relaxed in
the sunshine by the water on beanbags, or by the roadside, watching
an array of street performers from a string quartet with ballroom
dancers, to jugglers to singing guitarists and even a young chap
expertly playing the bagpipes. In Wellington there are no rules when
it comes to style or having to 'fit in'. From steam punk to real
punk, anything goes!

The Waterfront, Wellington

I can see the sea!

Gareth fitting right in with his steampunk sunnies!

And there's so much
free stuff to do! Because we were staying at Liam's for a couple of
days, where dogs weren't permitted, we put Minnie in a boarding
kennel so that we could make the most of the city. Despite
Wellington's windy reputation, the sun shone brightly as Liam gave us
a tour of where had been his home for the best part of the last
couple of years and I could totally see why he loved the place so
much. I wouldn't mind living here either! We cruised the
waterfront, went to the amazing Te Papa museum (which incidentally is
free, how brilliant is that?) and then sat outside one of Liam's
favourite pubs, Bad Grannies in the sunshine and just watched the
world go by. The following day unfortunately dawned grey and windy,
but we had vowed to climb Mount Victoria, which looks out far over
the city, and so we did. Good grief, what a climb. We're talking
vertical here. 'Jeez mum, to look at you now you'd never think you
once ran a marathon!' pointed out Liam from miles ahead. 'It was
five years ago!' I pouted, as my legs threatened to buckle from under
me.

Liam and me at the top of Mount Vic. Bit windy!

Gareth and me taking windswept to new levels!

Finally by some
miracle, all three of us made it to the top and the view was worth
every crippling step. It didn't matter that the sun wasn't shining
or that the view around us was swathed in heavy swirling clouds –
we had climbed so high we were actually IN those clouds! How many
people can truly say they have their head in the clouds? Yet another
one of many unforgettable free activities in this wonderful city.
The one activity we did pay for was a tour of Weta Workshop – the
award winning designers and creators behind such epic movies as the
Lord of the Rings trilogy, Avatar and Warcraft. What an astounding
place of creative genius. The tour really was fascinating, we could
have stayed all day! We chose the cheapest tour at $25 and learned
so much, if you're ever in Wellington you have to go there!

Golem with his fishy at Weta Workshop

Lurtz from Warcraft at Weta Workshop

The best thing however
was spending a precious few days with Liam. Living on the road when
you have family is hard. When you have no real home for them to come
and visit, time is often limited to snatching a couple of hours here,
a lunch or dinner there. This time it was me coming to visit Liam in
HIS home, and I was so proud of how my boy comfortably wound his way
around the city. Whoever thought that shy kid from Te Kauwhata would
end up being a confident young man living half way down the country?
And finally – almost two years to the day since he left home – he
FINALLY let me give him some cooking lessons!

It's been a busy,
wonderful week for sure. Tomorrow marks three months on the road –
and the start of another new adventure as we board the ferry for the
South Island! Bring it on!

1 comment:

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About Me

Jackie Norman had her first work published at the tender age of seven and has been writing for both national and international newspapers, magazines and websites ever since. Also formerly known as Penny Wise from Simple Savings, Jackie is the co-author of 'The $21 Challenge' and has written a weekly column for That's Life! magazine for nine years under the same name.
In 2016, after more than a decade of whittling down her materialistic lifestyle, Jackie sold her home and now lives on the road permanently, travelling the length and breadth of NZ in a campervan called Ken with husband Gareth and faithful dog Minnie. You can follow their travels on Facebook at Riches Have Wheels, on Instagram @parsleymonious or in print each month in Motorhomes, Caravans & Destinations magazine.